The common term for all gymnosperms is softwoods.
Cedar tree hardwood or soft.
Hardwood comes from angiosperm or flowering plants such as oak maple or walnut.
Classifying wood as either a hardwood or softwood comes down to its physical structure and makeup and so it is overly simple to think of hardwoods as being hard and durable compared to soft and workable softwoods.
It s a term to describe their biological characteristics not the actual hardness of the wood.
Cedar is not a hardwood it is a softwood.
That is not the case for cedar.
No cedar is not a hardwood.
Other soft hardwoods.
But that doesn t mean all softwoods are.
Simply put angiosperm means that the trees are producing seeds that are encased and that the trees are flowering.
This happens to be generally true but there are exceptions such as in the cases of wood from yew trees a softwood that is relatively hard and wood from balsa trees a.
The actual hardness or density of the wood has little to do with the classification.
Hardwood comes from deciduous leaf bearing trees.
Cedar is a gymnosperm tree meaning non flowering.
Generally if a tree is an angiosperm bearing.
It belongs to a group of plants known as gymnosperms which includes most conifers such as pine and fir trees.
So cedar is per definition a softwood.